Optimisation, expansion and improvement

Biological treatment plants are designed and constructed on the assumption of fixed in-flows in terms of quantities and contaminants.

Changes in production capacities, product ranges and regulatory stipulations can usually prompt changes in the quantity of effluent and its composition, in which the original process parameters no longer match optimal efficiency, leading to an overload of the plant’s capacity and a deterioration of the degradation performance.

In such cases, the plant need not immediately be expanded, but rather its performance can be modified to suit the new requirements

after careful analysis of the situation, by implementing the

optimal combination of suitable measures,

which facilitate

improvements without large-scale investment, or by implementing

minor expansion measures.

The “tools“ we deploy for this are:

Experimental determination of process parameters

Application of optimised, cultivated microorganisms, whose performance can be considerably enhanced by